This Side of Cooperstown

This Side of Cooperstown
Author :
Publisher : Courier Corporation
Total Pages : 290
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780486146119
ISBN-13 : 0486146111
Rating : 4/5 (19 Downloads)

Synopsis This Side of Cooperstown by : Larry Moffi

Enshrinement in the Hall of Fame is the ultimate honor for major leaguers. This rousing oral history recounts stories of 17 players who came up just short: Virgil Trucks, Gene Woodling, Carl Erskine, and others.

This Side of Cooperstown

This Side of Cooperstown
Author :
Publisher : Courier Dover Publications
Total Pages : 292
Release :
ISBN-10 : PSU:000067806324
ISBN-13 :
Rating : 4/5 (24 Downloads)

Synopsis This Side of Cooperstown by : Larry Moffi

Enshrinement in the Hall of Fame is the ultimate honor for any major leaguer. This rousing oral history tells the story of 17 legendary players who came up just short of Cooperstown: Virgil Trucks, Gene Woodling, Carl Erskine, and others. Collectively, the humorous, engaging, behind-the-scenes stories also tell the tale of baseball in the 1950s. "Great fun." — The New York Times.

The Road to Cooperstown

The Road to Cooperstown
Author :
Publisher : Macmillan
Total Pages : 285
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781429981132
ISBN-13 : 142998113X
Rating : 4/5 (32 Downloads)

Synopsis The Road to Cooperstown by : Tom Stanton

As he did with his award-winning book, The Final Season, Tom Stanton again tells a magical tale of fathers, brothers, and baseball heroes certain to resonate with sports fans everywhere. Every true baseball fan dreams of visiting Cooperstown. Some make the trip as boys, when the promise of a spot in the lineup with the Yankees or Red Sox or Tigers glows on the horizon, as certain as the sunrise. Some go later in life, long after their Little League years, to glimpse the past, not the future. And still others talk of somedays and of pilgrimages that await. For Tom Stanton, the trip took nearly three decades. The dream first grabbed hold of him in 1972, in the era of Vietnam and Watergate and Johnny Bench and the Oakland Athletics. Stanton, then an eleven-year-old Michigan boy who lived for the game, became fascinated by the National Baseball Hall of Fame, the sport's spiritual home, the place to which great players aspire. He plotted ways to convince his father to take him to the famous village along Lake Otsego. But his plans for that season never materialized. They disappeared in the turmoil caused by his mother's life-threatening illness and his brother's antiwar activities. Still, the dream lingered through the summers that followed. Twenty-nine years later, he invited the two men who had introduced him to the sport, his elderly father and his older brother, to join him on a trip to the Hall. Finally, they embarked on their long-delayed adventure. The Road to Cooperstown is a true story populated with colorful characters: a philanthropic family that launched the museum and uses its wealth to, among other things, ensure that McDonald's stays out of the turn-of-the-century downtown; the devoted fan who wrote a book to get his hero into the Hall of Fame; the Guyana native who grew up without baseball but comes to the induction ceremony every year; the librarian on a mission to preserve his great-grandfather's memory; the baseball legends who appear suddenly along Main Street; and the dying man who fulfills one of his last wishes on a warm day in spring. This adventure, though brief, provides a true bonding experience that is the heart of a sweet, one-of-a-kind book about baseball, family, the Hall of Fame, and the town with which it shares a rich heritage.

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Cooperstown

A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Cooperstown
Author :
Publisher : Triumph Books
Total Pages : 265
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781623681531
ISBN-13 : 1623681537
Rating : 4/5 (31 Downloads)

Synopsis A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to Cooperstown by : Mickey McDermott

A memoir by the 1940s pitching sensation looks back at a career playing for thirteen teams in four countries from the 1940s to the 1960s.

The Cooperstown Casebook

The Cooperstown Casebook
Author :
Publisher : Thomas Dunne Books
Total Pages : 465
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781250071217
ISBN-13 : 1250071216
Rating : 4/5 (17 Downloads)

Synopsis The Cooperstown Casebook by : Jay Jaffe

The Cooperstown Casebook by Jay Jaffe provides a definitive guide to the greatest players in baseball history, and the Hall of Fame.

Cranks from Cooperstown

Cranks from Cooperstown
Author :
Publisher : Tourmaster Publications
Total Pages : 200
Release :
ISBN-10 : 0966263812
ISBN-13 : 9780966263817
Rating : 4/5 (12 Downloads)

Synopsis Cranks from Cooperstown by : Dennis Savoie

Love All

Love All
Author :
Publisher : Macmillan
Total Pages : 273
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780805096972
ISBN-13 : 0805096973
Rating : 4/5 (72 Downloads)

Synopsis Love All by : Callie Wright

Reunited by the unexpected death of their family matriarch in the spring of 1994 New York, the Cole family struggles for privacy and stability in the wake of local scandals, a love triangle, and a 1960s sexual self-help book that reveals shattering secrets.

The Clarks of Cooperstown

The Clarks of Cooperstown
Author :
Publisher : Knopf
Total Pages : 446
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9780307494528
ISBN-13 : 0307494527
Rating : 4/5 (28 Downloads)

Synopsis The Clarks of Cooperstown by : Nicholas Fox Weber

Nicholas Fox Weber, author of the acclaimed Patron Saints (“Exhilarating avant-garde entertainment”—Sam Hunter, The New York Times Book Review) and Balthus (“The authoritative account of his life and work”—Michael Ravitch, Newsday), gives us now the idiosyncratic lives of Sterling and Stephen Clark—two of America’s greatest art collectors, heirs to the Singer sewing machine fortune, and for decades enemies of each other. He tells the story, as well, of the two generations that preceded theirs, giving us an intimate portrait of one of the least known of America’s richest families. He begins with Edward Clark—the brothers’ grandfather, who amassed the Clark fortune in the late-nineteenth century—a man with nerves of steel; a Sunday school teacher who became the business partner of the wild inventor and genius Isaac Merritt Singer. And, by the turn of the twentieth century, was the major stockholder of the Singer Manufacturing Company. We follow Edward’s rise as a real estate wizard making headlines in 1880 when he commissioned Manhattan’s first luxury apartment building. The house was called “Clark’s Folly”; today it’s known as the Dakota. We see Clark’s son—Alfred—enigmatic and famously reclusive; at thirty-eight he inherited $50 million and became one of the country’s richest men. An image of propriety—good husband, father of four—in Europe, he led a secret homosexual life. Alfred was a man with a passion for art and charity, which he passed on to his four sons, in particular Sterling and Stephen Clark. Sterling, the second-oldest, buccaneering and controversial, loved impressionism, created his own museum in Williamstown, Massachusetts—and shocked his family by marrying an actress from the Comédie Française. Together the Sterling Clarks collected thousands of paintings and bred racehorses. In a highly public case, Sterling sued his three brothers over issues of inheritance, and then never spoke to them again. He was one of the central figures linked to a bizarre and little-known attempted coup against Franklin Delano Roosevelt’s presidency. We are told what really happened and why—and who in American politics was implicated but never prosecuted. Sterling’s brother—Stephen—self-effacing and responsible—became chairman and president of the Museum of Modern Art and gave that institution its first painting, Edward Hopper’s House by the Railroad. Thirteen years later, in an act that provoked intense controversy, Stephen dismissed the Museum’s visionary founding director, Alfred Barr, who for more than a decade had single-handedly established the collection and exhibition programs that determined how the art of the twentieth century was regarded. Stephen gave or bequeathed to museums many of the paintings that today are still their greatest attractions. With authority, insight, and a flair for evoking time and place, Weber examines the depths of the brothers’ passions, the vehemence of their lifelong feud, the great art they acquired, and the profound and lasting impact they had on artistic vision in America.

Fergie

Fergie
Author :
Publisher : Triumph Books (IL)
Total Pages : 0
Release :
ISBN-10 : 1600781713
ISBN-13 : 9781600781711
Rating : 4/5 (13 Downloads)

Synopsis Fergie by : Fergie Jenkins

Jenkins' life story--from Chatham, Ontario, to Cooperstown--is compelling, and Fergie tells it himself in his own unique and inimitable style. A tremendous all-around athlete who has always been proud of his roots and representing his country during a lifetime in the game, Jenkins established a reputation as one of the greatest pitchers of not only his era but of all time. A strikeout king who whiffed more than 3,000 batters, Jenkins earned the trust of his managers as a pitcher who completed what he started. This is the story of a man who refused to be leveled by sadness and disappointments away from the playing field. It is also the story of behind-the-scenes good humor in clubhouses and what takes place on baseball teams as they live and play together for months at a time, as only Fergie can tell it.

Baseball's Creation Myth

Baseball's Creation Myth
Author :
Publisher : McFarland
Total Pages : 227
Release :
ISBN-10 : 9781476602066
ISBN-13 : 1476602069
Rating : 4/5 (66 Downloads)

Synopsis Baseball's Creation Myth by : Brian Martin

The story about baseball's being invented in Cooperstown, New York, in 1839 by Abner Doubleday served to prove that the U.S. national pastime was an American game, not derived from the English children's game of rounders as had been believed. The tale, embraced by Americans, has long been proven false but to this day, Cooperstown is celebrated as the birthplace of baseball. The story has captured the hearts of millions. But who spun that tale and why? This book provides a surprising answer about the origins of America's most durable myth. It seems that Abner Graves, who espoused Cooperstown as the birthplace of the game, likely was inspired by another story about an early game of baseball. The stories were remarkably similar, as were the men who told them. For the first time, this book links the stories and lives of Graves, a mining engineer, and Adam Ford, a medical doctor, both residents of Denver, Colorado. While the actual origins of the game of baseball remain subject to debate and study, new light is shed on the source of baseball's durable creation myth.